05/29/2026
My stepfather raised five children who weren't his — after his funeral, we each received a letter that was never meant for the others to see.
My mom married Thomas when I was five.
I wasn't his daughter. Not by blood. But two years later, when my mother died suddenly, everyone expected him to send me to my grandparents.
He didn't.
He packed my lunch, learned how to braid my hair from a library book, and told anyone who asked, "She's my daughter."
When I was nine, he adopted two children from a shelter — twins, a boy and a girl, both seven. Michael and Mara.
Two years after that, he became a foster father to another brother and sister: Noah, seven, and Susan, five. After a few years, he officially adopted them as well.
Just like that, our small house became loud, crowded, messy, and full.
None of us came from the same beginning, but Thomas made us feel like we had the same home.
He worked two jobs most of my childhood. He packed our school bags at midnight and never once let us hear him complain.
By the time he had his heart attack at fifty-six, we were all grown.
I had a job. Michael had a wife. Mara lived three states away. Noah had two kids of his own.
And Susan...
Susan left the week she turned eighteen.
She never explained why. She stopped answering Thomas's calls, returned his birthday cards unopened, and told me once, "You don't know him the way I do."
Still, she came to the funeral.
She stood at the back in a black coat, pale and silent.
After the service, Thomas's lawyer asked all five of us to come to his office.
On the desk was a locked wooden box.
Inside were five envelopes.
One for each of us.
Mine had my name written in Thomas's shaky handwriting.
I opened it with trembling hands.
My stomach tightened as I read the first line.
"My sweet girl, Susan left because she discovered something about me the rest of you never knew." ⬇️